Prohibits AI system deployers in Illinois from causing algorithmic discrimination. Requires annual impact assessments and governance programs to manage AI risks.
Analysis summaries, actor details, and coverage mappings were LLM-classified and may contain errors.
This is a binding legislative act with mandatory obligations, enforcement mechanisms including civil actions and administrative fines, and specific penalties for non-compliance. The document uses mandatory language throughout and establishes clear legal obligations for deployers.
The document has good coverage of approximately 5-6 subdomains, with strong focus on unfair discrimination (1.1, 1.3), privacy compromise (2.1), governance failure (6.5), and lack of transparency (7.4). Coverage is concentrated in discrimination prevention, privacy protection, and AI system governance domains.
The document governs AI use across multiple sectors through its regulation of automated decision tools making consequential decisions. It has comprehensive coverage of employment, education, housing, healthcare, financial services, and public administration sectors, with explicit mentions of criminal justice, legal services, and utilities.
The document primarily focuses on the Deploy and Operate and Monitor stages of the AI lifecycle. It requires impact assessments before deployment and ongoing monitoring through governance programs, annual reviews, and designated compliance officers. There is minimal coverage of earlier stages like data collection or model building.
The document explicitly defines and covers AI systems and automated decision tools. It includes generative AI systems in its definition. There is no mention of frontier AI, general purpose AI, foundation models, compute thresholds, or open-weight models. The focus is on automated decision tools used for consequential decisions regardless of AI type.
Illinois General Assembly; People of the State of Illinois
The document is a bill enacted by the Illinois General Assembly, representing the legislative body of the State of Illinois. The opening text explicitly identifies the proposing authority.
Illinois Attorney General
The Attorney General is explicitly designated as the primary enforcement authority with power to impose administrative fines, receive impact assessments, and enforce violations under the Consumer Fraud and Deceptive Business Practices Act. Additionally, affected individuals can bring civil actions.
Illinois Attorney General
The Attorney General receives and reviews impact assessments from deployers and can share them with other state entities. Deployers themselves are also required to conduct ongoing monitoring through annual reviews and designated compliance employees.
The document explicitly targets 'deployers' of automated decision tools, defined as persons, partnerships, state or local government agencies, or corporations that use automated decision tools to make consequential decisions. The obligations apply specifically to entities deploying AI systems.
8 subdomains (4 Good, 4 Minimal)